An input buffer receiver circuit for electronic devices (e.g., memory chips) to receive reduced-swing and high bandwidth inputs to provide “buffered” output signals having symmetrical rising and falling delays, and without additional current dissipation over previous receiver circuits, is disclosed. The receiver circuit may include two differential amplifier pair stages (i.e., 4 total differential amplifiers). The first stage of differential amplifiers convert the single-ended input signal to a full-differential signal, which is converted back to a single-ended output signal by the second stage of differential amplifiers. The output of a p-diff first stage may be connected to the input of an n-diff second stage and the output of an n-diff first stage may be connected to the input of a p-diff second stage thereby creating a “cross coupled” structure. Various current saving and biasing methods may also be employed to keep operating current the same or lower than previous designs.
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8. A method, comprising:
providing, with a first pair of differential amplifiers, first and second differential signals responsive, at least in part, to receipt of a single-ended input signal, wherein the first and second differential signals are based, at least in part, on a same reference signal;
providing the first and second differential signals to a second pair of differential amplifiers including providing the first differential signal from a p-type differential amplifier to an n-type differential amplifier and providing the second differential signal from an n-type differential amplifier to a p-type differential amplifier, wherein individual ones of the second pair of differential amplifiers are coupled between first and second supply voltages in parallel; and
providing first and second output signals from the second pair of differential amplifiers to a node.
16. An apparatus, comprising:
a first set of differential amplifiers including a first p-type differential amplifier and a first n-type differential amplifier, the first p-type differential amplifier configured to provide a first differential signal, wherein the first and second differential signals are based, at least in part, on a same reference signal;
a second set of differential amplifiers including a second p-type differential amplifier and a second n-type differential amplifier, the second p-type differential amplifier configured to receive the second differential signal and the second n-type differential amplifier configured to receive the first differential signal, wherein the second set of differential amplifiers is further configured to provide a plurality of output signals responsive, at least in part, to receipt of the first and second differential signals; and
wherein the differential amplifiers of the second set are separated differential amplifiers.
1. A method of generating a combined output signal, comprising:
converting a single-ended input signal into first and second differential signals using a first pair of differential amplifiers, wherein the second differential signal is isolated from the first differential signal and wherein the first and second differential signals are based, at least in part, on a same reference signal;
applying the first and second differential signals to a second pair of differential amplifiers to generate first and second output signals including providing the first differential signal from a p-type differential amplifier to an n-type differential amplifier and providing the second differential signal from an n-type differential amplifier to a p-type differential amplifier, wherein each of the second pair of differential amplifiers is configured to swing between first and second supply voltages; and
combining the first and second output signals to generate the combined output signal.
3. The method of
4. The method of
5. The method of
before said converting the differential input signals, providing a bandgap voltage to the first pair of differential amplifiers.
6. The method of
7. The method of
9. The method of
combining the first and second output signals at the node to generate a combined output signal.
11. The method of
12. The method of
13. The method of
providing the input signal to the first pair of differential amplifiers with an input buffer.
15. The method of
17. The apparatus of
a receiver circuit coupled to the first set of differential amplifiers and configured to provide the input signal to the first set of differential amplifiers.
18. The apparatus of
19. The apparatus of
20. The apparatus of
21. The apparatus of
22. The apparatus of
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This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/611,264, filed Nov. 3, 2009, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,125,268, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/213,220 filed Aug. 26, 2005, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,622,986. These applications and patents are each incorporated herein by reference, in their entirety, for any purpose.
1. Field of the Disclosure
The present disclosure generally relates to electronic circuits and, more particularly, to an input buffer receiver circuit in a memory device to process reduced-swing inputs.
2. Brief Description of Related Art
Memory devices are electronic devices that are widely used in many electronic products and computers to store data. A memory device is a semiconductor electronic device that includes a number of memory cells, each cell storing one bit of data. The data stored in the memory cells can be read during a read operation.
A processor or memory controller (not shown) may communicate with the chip 12 and perform memory read/write operations. The processor and the memory chip 12 may communicate using address signals on the address lines or address bus 17, data signals on the data lines or data bus 18, and control signals (e.g., a row address select (RAS) signal, a column address select (CAS) signal, a chip select (CS) signal, etc. (not shown)) on the control lines or control bus 19. The “width” (i.e., number of pins) of address, data and control buses may differ from one memory configuration to another.
Those of ordinary skill in the art will readily recognize that memory chip 12 of
The memory chip 12 may include a plurality of memory cells 26 generally arranged in an array of rows and columns. A row decode circuit 28 and a column decode circuit 30 may select the rows and columns, respectively, in the array in response to decoding an address provided on the address bus 17. Data to/from the memory cells 26 are then transferred over the data bus 18 via sense amplifiers and a data output path (not shown). A memory controller (not shown) may provide relevant control signals (not shown) on the control bus 19 to control data communication to and from the memory chip 12 via an I/O (input/output) circuit 32. The I/O circuit 32 may include a number of data output buffers or output drivers to receive the data bits from the memory cells 26 and provide those data bits or data signals to the corresponding data lines in the data bus 18. The I/O circuit 32 may also include various memory input buffers and control circuits that interact with the row and column decoders 28, 30, respectively, to select the memory cells for data read/write operations. A prior art memory input buffer receiver circuit is illustrated in
The memory controller (not shown) may determine the modes of operation of memory chip 12. Some examples of the input signals or control signals (not shown in
It is observed here that one of the input signals to the receiver circuit 34 (i.e., the Vin signal 43) may be any signal (data, address, or control) received from a device (e.g., a memory controller (not shown)) connected to the memory chip 12. The input signals may be received by one or more input buffers (not shown) that may be part of the I/O unit 32 in the memory chip 12. The input buffers, in turn, receive the input signals (Vin) and process them through the input buffer receiver circuits similar to the circuit 34 shown in
An output of the differential amplifier 36 is obtained at the junction 56A of the drain terminals of the transistors 42 and 50 as shown in
It is observed here that when the input signal Vin 43 has a large (e.g., Vref±300 mV) or medium (e.g., Vref±150 mV) swing, the P-diff 36 and N-diff 38 differential amplifier pair in the input stage 34 will generate an output 66 that having symmetrical rising and falling time delays. However, that may not be the case when Vin is of a reduced-swing (e.g., Vref±75 mV) input. When the input signal Vin 43 has a small swing, the output (Diff_Out 56) of the differential amplifier pair 36, 38 will also have less signal swing due to the limited gain of the differential pair 36, 38. Such limited gain may be present because of a large bias current used to increase the operation speed of the differential pair 36, 38, especially when higher clock frequencies are used in the system.
When PVT varies, the center voltage as well as signal swing (from a given Vref) of the Diff_Out signal 56 varies as can be seen from a comparison of the waveforms 56-1 and 56-2 in
It is observed that small signal swing is becoming a trend for high bandwidth signal interconnects in electronic systems (including, for example, systems connecting high-speed memory devices with other electronic components through such interconnects). The reduced signal swing can effectively reduce the power supply noise (which may be present in the input signal, Vin), greatly improving the signal integrity. As noted, modern high speed interconnection between a memory chip (e.g., the memory chip 12) and the chipset on a PCB (not shown) also follows the same trend of employing reduced-swing signals to improve signal integrity. However, as per the discussion hereinbefore, it is seen that the prior art input buffer receiver circuit 34 suffers from performance degradation when the input signal swing is very small.
A small or reduced swing input signal (Vin) with high bandwidth thus requires a sensitive and high speed input receiver. It is therefore desirable to devise an input receiver circuit that has improved performance when the input signal swing is small over PVT corners. It is also desirable that such receiver circuit exhibit similar or comparable performance with the prior art receiver circuit of
The present disclosure contemplates a method of generating an output signal from an input signal. The method comprises converting the input signal into a full-differential signal using a first pair of differential amplifiers including a first P-type differential amplifier and a first N-type differential amplifier; applying the full-differential signal to a second pair of differential amplifiers including a second P-type differential amplifier and a second N-type differential amplifier; and combining outputs of the second P-type and the second N-type differential amplifiers to generate the output signal.
In one embodiment, the present disclosure further contemplates a method that comprises applying an input signal and a reference signal as two inputs of a first P-type differential amplifier and a first N-type differential amplifier; obtaining a first pair of complementary outputs from the first P-type differential amplifier and a second pair of complementary outputs from the first N-type differential amplifier; and supplying the first pair of complementary outputs as two inputs of a second N-type differential amplifier and the second pair of complementary outputs as two inputs of a second P-type differential amplifier.
In another embodiment, the present disclosure contemplates a method, which comprises receiving a reduced-swing, single-ended input signal; converting the input signal into a full-differential signal; and generating a single-ended output signal from the full-differential signal.
The present disclosure also contemplates an input receiver circuit. The circuit comprises a first pair of differential amplifiers, wherein each differential amplifier in the first pair is configured to receive a pair of inputs and to generate a corresponding pair of outputs therefrom. The circuit also comprises a second pair of differential amplifiers, wherein each differential amplifier in the second pair is coupled to a respective one of the first pair of differential amplifiers and receives the corresponding pair of outputs therefrom as inputs thereto, and wherein a corresponding output of each differential amplifier in the second pair is combined to obtain an output signal.
In an alternative embodiment, the present disclosure contemplates a circuit that comprises a first P-type differential amplifier configured to receive a reference signal and an input signal as inputs thereto and to generate a first and a second outputs therefrom; a first N-type differential amplifier configured to receive the reference signal and the input signal as inputs thereto and to generate a third and a fourth outputs therefrom; a second P-type differential amplifier coupled to the first N-type differential amplifier to receive the third and the fourth outputs as inputs thereto and to generate a first output signal therefrom; and a second N-type differential amplifier coupled to the first P-type differential amplifier to receive the first and the second outputs as inputs thereto and to generate a second output signal therefrom.
An input receiver circuit according to the present disclosure may be part of an electronic device including, for example, a memory device. Such memory devices may be used in various systems including, for example, computing or data processing systems. Such electronic devices and systems are also contemplated in various embodiments of the present disclosure.
An input buffer receiver circuit for electronic devices (e.g., memory chips), designed according to the teachings of the present disclosure, receives and processes reduced-swing and high bandwidth inputs to obtain “buffered” output signals therefrom with symmetrical rising and falling delays, and without additional current dissipation over previous receiver circuits. The receiver circuit may include two stages of differential amplifier pairs (i.e., a total of 4 separated differential amplifiers). The P-diff and N-diff differential amplifiers in the first stage convert the single-ended input signal to a full-differential signal, which is then converted back to the single-ended output signal by the P-diff and N-diff pair in the second stage. The outputs of the first stage P-diff are connected to the inputs of the second stage N-diff and the outputs of the first stage N-diff are connected to the inputs of the second stage P-diff, thereby creating a “cross” coupled structure. Various current saving and biasing methods may also be employed to keep the operating current the same or lower than the previous receiver circuit designs.
Although the previous paragraphs discuss particular configurations involving P and N type differential amplifiers, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that any combination of P type differential amplifiers, N type differential amplifiers, combinations of P and N type differential amplifiers, as well as the number of differential amplifier stages, may be employed using the concepts disclosed herein.
For the present disclosure to be easily understood and readily practiced, the present disclosure will now be described for purposes of illustration and not limitation, in connection with the following figures, wherein:
Reference will now be made in detail to certain embodiments of the present disclosure, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. It is to be understood that the figures and descriptions of the present disclosure included herein illustrate and describe elements that are of particular relevance to the present disclosure, while eliminating, for the sake of clarity, other elements found in typical solid-state electronic devices, memories or memory-based systems. It is noted at the outset that the terms “connected”, “connecting,” “electrically connected,” etc., are used interchangeably herein to generally refer to the condition of being electrically connected. It is further noted that various block diagrams and circuit diagrams shown and discussed herein employ logic circuits that implement positive logic, i.e., a high value on a signal is treated as a logic “1” whereas a low value is treated as a logic “0.” However, any of the circuits discussed herein may be easily implemented in negative logic (i.e., a high value on a signal is treated as a logic “0” whereas a low value is treated as a logic “1”).
As shown in
It is noted here that signals or circuit elements similar between the circuits in
The second differential amplifier in the first stage differential amplifier pair 72 is the N-type differential amplifier 78, which includes two NMOS transistors 94-95 that receive the input signals Vref 41 and Vin 43, respectively, at their respective gate terminals. The drain terminal of NMOS 94 is connected to the drain terminal of PMOS 96 as represented by the junction point 98-1. Similarly, the drain of NMOS 95 is connected to the drain of PMOS 97 at the junction point 98-2. The gates of transistors 96-97 are connected together and also to the junction of resistors 99-100 connected between the junctions 98-1 and 98-2 as shown in
As mentioned before, the second stage differential pair 74 includes a P-type differential amplifier 80 and an N-type differential amplifier 82. The P-diff 80 includes two PMOS transistors 106-107 to receive the output signals from the N-diff 78 (i.e., the Ndiff_out 102 and the Ndiff_outf 103 signals) as inputs at their respective gate terminals. Thus, in the embodiment of
Similarly, the N-type differential amplifier 82 may include two NMOS transistors 112-113 to receive the output signals from the P-diff 76 (i.e., the Pdiff out 92 and the Pdiff outf 93 signals) as inputs at their respective gate terminals. Thus, in the embodiment of
In the embodiment of
It is observed here that although the same term “Diff_Out” is used herein to refer to the combined output of the second stage 74 as that term was used to refer to the combined output of P-diff 36 and N-diff 38 in
As noted before, the first stage differential pair 72 converts the single-ended (or non-differential) input signal Vin 43 to a full-differential signal. That is, the single input signal Vin 43 is converted into a pair of signals Pdiff out 92 and Ndiff_out 102. The complements of signals 92 and 102 are also generated to provide the second inputs needed for the second stage differential amplifiers 80, 82. The complements may therefore be considered a part of the full-differential signal generated from the single-ended input Vin 43. This conversion into a full-differential signal may be performed using separated P-diff 76 and N-diff 78 amplifiers in the first stage 72. Thereafter, the separated differential amplifiers P-diff 80 and N-diff 82 in the second stage 74 convert back the full-differential signal input to the second stage 74 (from the first stage 72) into the single-ended output signal Diff_Out 118. It is observed here that the differential amplifiers 76, 78 in the first stage 72 are not connected to each other, nor are the differential amplifiers 80, 82 in the second stage 74. In other words, these differential amplifiers 76, 78, 80, 82 may be considered as “separated.” By “cross” connecting the outputs (i.e., signals 92-93) of the first stage P-diff amplifier 76 to the inputs of the second stage N-diff amplifier 82 and outputs (i.e., signals 102-103) of the first stage N-diff amplifier 78 to the inputs of the second stage P-diff amplifier 80, the performance and current savings in the receiver circuit 70 may be improved as discussed later.
In the embodiment of
As discussed later in more detail, the bias current for the first stage 72 may be mainly controlled by the bias resistor Rbias 126. Hence, the variation in the bias current (to the first stage 72) due to PVT variations in the resistance of Rbias 126 is proportional to the common mode feedback (CMFB) current variation (which may be controlled by two feedback resistors in each differential amplifier in the first stage 72—i.e., the feedback resistors 88-89 in P-diff 76 and resistors 99-100 in N-diff 78). Thus, the signal swing of the first stage differential output (i.e., the pair of signals Pdiff out 92 and Ndiff_out 102, or the pair of signals Pdiff outf 93 and Ndiff_outf 103) remains relatively constant.
It was mentioned before that the common mode input voltage for the second stage 74 may be controlled by the first stage differential pair 72. It may be controlled, in a minor way, by the bias current Ibias, and, in a major way, by the ratio of Vth (threshold voltage) to Ids (drain-source current) for the transistors (more specifically, the PMOS 96-97 in N-diff 78 and NMOS 85-86 in P-diff 76) in the first stage 72. Because the first stage N-diff outputs 102-103 are supplied as the second stage P-diff 80 inputs, the performance of the PMOS devices 96-97 in the first stage N-diff 78 varies in the same direction as the performance of the input PMOS devices 106-107 in the second stage P-diff 80. Similarly, the performance of the NMOS devices 85-86 in the first stage P-diff 76 also varies in the same direction as the performance of the input NMOS devices 112-113 in the second stage N-diff 82. Thus, the overall output of the second stage (i.e., the Diff_Out signal 118) remains unchanged during PVT variations.
Based on various operational details given hereinabove for the circuit configuration 70 in
When PVT varies, the center voltage as well as signal swing (from a given Vref) of the Diff_Out signal 118 varies as can be seen from a comparison of the waveforms 118-1 and 118-2 in
It is observed here that because there is an additional second pair of differential amplifiers 80, 82 in the buffer receiver circuit 70 of
The bias current (Ibias) of each differential amplifier 76, 78 in the first stage 72 may be given by the following equation:
Ibias=(Vbandgap−Vth)/Rbias=(1.25V−Vth)/Rbias (1)
where “Vth” represents the threshold voltage of NMOS 122. It is seen from equation (1) that the bias current (Ibias) remains almost constant even when there are changes in the supply voltage (Vcc) because of the use of the constant bandgap voltage (Vbandgap) to supply the necessary bias current. The biasing current in the second stage differential amplifier pair 74 may also be reduced or limited by adding resistors R1 (between Vcc and the source terminal of bias PMOS 110 in P-diff 80) and R2 (between ground and the source terminal of bias NMOS 116 in N-diff 82). Further, the “cross”-coupled nature of the connection structure between differential pairs in the first stage 72 and second stage 74 (i.e., P-diff 76 outputs as inputs to N-diff 82, and N-diff 78 outputs as inputs to P-diff 80) may additionally avoid the second stage differential pair biasing current from going too high. The common mode input voltage of the second stage differential pair 74 is controlled by Ibias and the transistors in the first stage differential pair 72. Because of the stable biasing current (Ibias) in the first stage 72, the common mode input voltage of the second stage 74 may also remain relatively stable. The relatively stable common mode thus avoids the second stage biasing current from going too high. Furthermore, as discussed hereinbefore, the swing of the first stage output (i.e., signals 92-93 and 102-103) is also limited or controlled. This also helps to keep the biasing current low in the second stage 74.
In
In
The memory controller 152 can be a microprocessor, digital signal processor, embedded processor, micro-controller, dedicated memory test chip, a tester platform, or the like, and may be implemented in hardware or software. The memory controller 152 may control routine data transfer operations to/from the memories 140, for example, when the memory devices 140 are part of an operational computing system 146. The memory controller 152 may reside on the same motherboard (not shown) as that carrying the memory chips 140. Various other configurations of electrical connection between the memory chips 140 and the memory controller 152 may be possible. For example, the memory controller 152 may be a remote entity communicating with the memory chips 140 via a data transfer or communications network (e.g., a LAN (local area network) of computing devices).
The system 145 may include one or more input devices 156 (e.g., a keyboard or a mouse) connected to the computing unit 146 to allow a user to manually input data, instructions, etc., to operate the computing unit 146. One or more output devices 158 connected to the computing unit 146 may also be provided as part of the system 145 to display or otherwise output data generated by the processor 148. Examples of output devices 158 include printers, video terminals or video display units (VDUs). In one embodiment, the system 145 also includes one or more data storage devices 160 connected to the data processing unit 146 to allow the processor 148 to store data in or retrieve data from internal or external storage media (not shown). Examples of typical data storage devices 160 include drives that accept hard and floppy disks, CD-ROMs (compact disk read-only memories), and tape cassettes. As noted before, the memory devices 140 in the computing unit 146 have the configuration illustrated in
It is observed that although the discussion given hereinbefore has been primarily with reference to memory devices, it is evident that the input receiver circuit configuration 70 discussed hereinbefore with reference to
The foregoing describes a high performance input buffer receiver circuit that may be used in electronic devices (e.g., memory chips) to receive and process reduced-swing and high bandwidth inputs to obtain “buffered” output signals therefrom with symmetrical rising and falling delays, and without additional current dissipation over previous receiver circuits. The receiver circuit provides a better performance over prior circuits when the input signal swing is small, but also provides similar or comparable performance over prior circuits when input signal swing is wide. The new receiver circuit may include two stages of differential amplifier pairs (i.e., a total of 4 separated differential amplifiers) with each of the two differential amplifiers in the first stage being separately connected through interconnects to a corresponding differential amplifier in the second stage. The P-diff and N-diff differential amplifiers in the first stage convert the single-ended input signal to a full-differential signal, which is then converted back to the single-ended output signal by the P-diff and N-diff pair in the second stage. The outputs of the first stage P-diff are connected to the inputs of the second stage N-diff and the outputs of the first stage N-diff are connected to the inputs of the second stage P-diff, thereby creating a “cross” coupled structure. Various current saving and biasing methods may also be employed to keep the operating current the same or lower than the previous receiver circuit designs.
While the disclosure has been described in detail and with reference to specific embodiments thereof, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the embodiments. For example, although the previous discussion is directed to particular configurations involving P and N type differential amplifiers, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that any combination of just P type differential amplifiers, just N type differential amplifiers, or combinations of P and N type differential amplifiers, as well as the number of differential amplifier stages as shown in
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